exhibitionRobert Grunder, Colin Keefe and Lucas Monaco, Critical Mass

Date

Opening Reception

Curated By

Artists

exhibition Images

Installation view

Installation view 2

Lucas Monaco, Valley Approach

Robert Grunder, Untitled (series)

Press and Promotion

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Brochure interior

Brochure exterior

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Press release

About the exhibition

America. The land of opportunity, the land of plenty. A place where infinite vistas of landscape, space, and resources are cloaked in mythologies of power, redemption and sublime awe. A place of boundless optimism and rampant materialism. A country where relentless betterment, reinvention of the self and individual happiness are seen as a birthright. All of these overarching grand qualities are bound up with the ultimate creative and willful expression that exists within the home and its enveloping environment of city or suburb. The way we live now in our communities is an insistent, pressing concern. Affordability of housing, quality of life, relationship to the land and environment, as well as availability of natural resources to support ever-expanding subdivisions are all issues at stake. Utopian thought has always played a major role in the American notion of the home and community as it pertains to progress, fulfillment, order, and organization. This is heavily reflected in the philosophical underpinnings that feed the growth of cities and suburbs and their subsequent schizophrenic relationship with nature and land. Nineteenth century writers, artists and philosophers romanticized the connection of humans to a vast, idyllic, wild western landscape that held within its environs the keys to salvation and access to the sublime. In the modern age, Le Corbusier developed The Radiant City, an urban plan that was based on order, verticality, access to light and circumscribed contact to patches of green, open space. In an ideal world, these transparent, isolating spaces were supposed to alleviate the grime, slums, poverty, overcrowding, and disorder associated with post-industrial cityscapes. In present day America, the positive and negative stereotypes associated with suburbia still retain its ever-present lock on the culture and psyche. It is tidy, orderly, pruned, and cultivated. There is light, space, safety, and room to spread out. Conversely, it is also painted as soulless, homogenous, and narrow. From the pre-made housing kits sold by Sears in the early 20th century, through the idealized beginnings of post-war, mass-produced Levittown in Pennsylvania and Long Island, NY, to the more recent proliferation of immense exurbs, gated communities and theme neighborhoods based on the popular paintings of Thomas Kinkade, suburbia is alive and well. Critical Mass presents three artists: Robert Grunder, Colin Keefe, and Lucas Monaco who utilize obsessive, repetitive, elegant drawing and line as a way of reconciling and displaying the shifting spatial notions and porous boundaries of what constitutes city and suburban life in the present as well as its dreamy, fantastical underpinnings. These three artists construct cities, communities, suburbs, and structures that are as much about the constraints of geography, topography, mass production, space, and land as they are meditations on the realities, utopian ideals and fantasies of living between and pulling from the opposing forces of civilization and nature. All three artists are intensely concerned with how buildings and their supporting infrastructure occupy, spread out, and displace mass and space. Furthermore, there is an appealing friction that builds up in all of their drawings. This arises from the homogeneous, endlessly repetitive, cookie-cutter quality of their building clusters and roads that subtly pushes against the delicate, tremulous, hand-made nature of their drawn and imagined linear worlds set down on the abstract white nothingness of the paper. This trio is also intrigued by an all-encompassing, aerial viewpoint that can be brought down to the level of the minutely specific through a focus on one building, lot or cul-de-sac within the larger expansive picture. There is never any loss of the human element in their drawings, even though it is masked by an endless, all-over breadth of construction. The scale is always manageable and subject to close scrutiny with a meandering eye. Rob Grunder’s intimate, elegant drawings of mapped suburbia on vellum are deeply rooted in the expressive power of line. Based on real maps of Fairfax County, VA, the artist has edited out all extraneous content and pared down his compositions to two or three colors and the basic indirect and winding vectors of roads and building clusters. Grunder’s drawings are very design oriented and flat, as he prefers to deal with the trace and imprint of buildings on landscape rather than the actual physical representation of the structure itself. These transparent drawings convey an alignment with biology and living systems run amok as they display a quality of unrestrained, almost cancerous growth of transportation arteries, roads, and housing on land. At the same time, these communities are strangely impersonal, conceptual, and detached, as if they could exist anywhere. They are not tied down by any profound attachment to land or environment, even as they react to the challenges of topography and terrain. Space is densely packed and hermetic. Nature has been squeezed out of the picture to make room for more buildings and access routes. Grunder presents a vision of normal suburban life that seems simultaneously familiar, tough to navigate and destructive in its rambling replication. The immense and airy drawings of Colin Keefe present semi-fantastical cities that wander and amble over the great span of the paper in a somewhat orderly disorder. His three-dimensional, transparent buildings are akin to pieces on a game board in that, for all of their translucency, they retain no intrinsic relationship to each other, except for sheer physical proximity. The normal relationships that govern placement and interconnectedness of buildings within a city are absent as each structure stand alone and resolute within the pressing tremulous mass of other, similar constructions. The transparency of these buildings takes away their bulk, adding a level of fantasy and play to how Keefe assembles his layout. The clear interiors also act like an obscuring veil that hides meaning, function, and relevance of their appointed task within his created world. Keefe is adept at integrating mass and space within his drawings, making his city constructions more organic and breathable than they appear to be in life. Like Rob Grunder’s maps of suburban sprawl, Keefe’s delicate cities seem poised for endless, steady growth, becoming a sober comment on the mixture of fantasy and reality that exists in constructing life in the present. The impenetrable, complicated, and dense drawn cities of Lucas Monaco are based both on real, crowded urban sites, and their resulting topographical make-up. They also possess an abstract, visionary quality that melds land use and buildings into one parasitic organism. Monaco utilizes aerial perspectives, strong thrusting sight lines and the blankness of the white paper to mold his cities into floating worlds both of and beyond the real. The repetitive and compact marks signify an infinite vastness of construction, molded by the contours and crannies of terrain. Monaco also exploits the emptiness of the white paper as it presses on the habitable, human space that he has carved from its void. This contested push and pull of nature vs. civilization speaks to an ever present anxiety of control, organization, and dominion that does not cease until every square inch of space is built on or held in reserve, to be developed at a later time. These evocative drawings make manifest the concerns of a modern society bent on pushing its store of limited resources to the edge. - Lisa Hatchadoorian; Lisa Hatchadoorian is currently Director of the Westby Gallery at Rowan University, Glassboro, NJ. Previously, she was Associate Curator for Pfizer Inc. She has curated many exhibitions that focused on drawing and painting in the New York City area and has worked with artists such as Max Gimblett, Jill Moser, and Sharon Louden. Ms. Hatchadoorian received her MA in Curatorial Studies from Bard College in 2000.